Awix (3310 KP) rated Project Power (2020) in Movies
Sep 9, 2020
Maybe some of these Netflix movies would be more impressive on a big screen where all the special effects and sound design would get an appropriate delivery and have the faculty-numbing effect this sort of film is depending on. Or maybe not, I don't know. As it is this has an interesting premise, charismatic leads and seems to genuinely want to do some social commentary about US society, the nature of power, etc etc. But that would require a level of downbeat grittiness wholly at odds with the extravaganza of lavish CGI and show-offy direction this film also wants to be, and it's the latter elements that win out. As a result it is watchable and engaging on a superficial level but you sort of lament the loss of the more interesting and restrained film this could have been instead. Hey ho.
Darkness Becomes Her (Gods & Monsters, #1)
Book
Ari can't help feeling lost and alone. With her teal coloured eyes and freakish silver hair that...
Frightened to Depths
Book
Murder is never smooth sailing... Charlotte McLaughlin assumes she's finally shed all her tears on...
Queen of Swords (Wilderness #5)
Book
It is the late summer of 1814, and Hannah Bonner and her half brother Luke have spent more than a...
Rachel King (13 KP) rated The Elephant Mountains in Books
Feb 11, 2019
Right away I was struck by the simplistic nature of the writing. This is Scott Ely's first book in the Young Adult genre, which I could easily guess from what the writing lacked. One major thing that bothered me throughout the book was Ely's habit of "telling" instead of "showing." He repeatedly made statements in the book like this: "She went on to tell him that their house was close by, on high ground, and they thought they could live upstairs." (page 38) Why couldn't Ely have written this out in dialogue. This kind of writing is littered throughout the text, and it left me feeling like I had been shorted a proper book. At a little over 200 pages in length, this book was too short for my expectations. I normally love dystopia, but this one was disappointing.
The main character Stephen was a likable character, but he seemed to be both extremely lucky and a kind of talisman for death. I understand that the conditions of the area that Stephen was traveling through were extremely dangerous with very limited resources, but did just about every single person that Stephen came across have to die? That strikes me as overkill, pardon the pun.
I also did not understand the ending. If there really was as much flooding as the radio continuously announced, then Stephen would have needed to travel much further than he did to find dry ground.
I gave the book three stars because I really liked the premise of the book, though it fell short of my expectations.
The Vines
Book
2014 Bram Stoker Awards finalist for Superior Achievement in a Novel The dark history of Spring...
Behind the Bars
Book
When I first met Jasmine Greene, she came in as raindrops. I was the awkward musician, and she...
romance
Courtship (Voodoo Butterfly #4)
Book
While Sophie Nouveau stresses over wedding plans, she fears Madame LaLaurie has been resurrected...
Mystery Paranormal Romance
The Feast of All Saints
Book
In the days before the Civil War, there lived in New Orleans the gens de couleur libre -...
Framed for Murder
Book
After a life-changing injury, Mel O'Rourke trades in her badge for bed sheets, running a B & B in...

